Prakrit
The Prakrits are a group of vernacular Middle Indo-Aryan languages used in India from around the 3rd century BCE to the 8th century CE. The term Prakrit is usually applied to the middle period of Middle Indo-Aryan languages, excluding earlier inscriptions and the later Pali. The Prakrits were used contemporaneously with the prestigious Classical Sanskrit of higher social classes. Prākṛta literally means "natural", as opposed to saṃskṛta, which literally means "constructed" or "refined".
Etymology
According to the Prākrṭa Prakāśa, an ancient Prakrit grammar, "Saṃskṛtam is the prakṛti - and the language that originates in, or comes from, that prakṛti, is therefore called prākṛtam." The same definition is also given by the Prakrit grammarian Acharya Hemachandra in his grammar of Prakrit. The dictionary of Monier Monier-Williams, however, interprets the word in the opposite sense: "the most frequent meanings of the term ', from which the word "prakrit" is derived, are "original, natural, normal" and the term is derived from ', "making or placing before or at first, the original or natural form or condition of anything, original or primary substance". In linguistic terms, this is used in contrast with , "refined".Definition
Modern scholars have used the term "Prakrit" to refer to two concepts:- Prakrit languages: a group of closely related literary languages
- the Prakrit language: one of the Prakrit languages, which alone was used as the primary language of entire poems
The broadest definition uses the term "Prakrit" to describe any Middle Indo-Aryan language that deviates from Sanskrit in any manner. American scholar Andrew Ollett points out that this unsatisfactory definition makes "Prakrit" a cover term for languages that were not actually called Prakrit in ancient India, such as:
- the language of Ashoka's inscriptions
- the language of later inscriptions of India, labeled "Monumental Prakrit", "Lena Prakrit", or "Stupa dialect"
- the language of inscriptions of Sri Lanka, labeled "Sinhalese Prakrit"
- Pali, the language of the Theravada Buddhist canon
- the Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit
- Gandhari, the language of birch-bark scrolls discovered in the region stretching from northwestern India to western China
- Scenic Prakrits
- * These languages are used exclusively in plays, as secondary languages
- * Their names indicate regional association, although these associations are mostly notional
- Primary Prakrits
- * These languages are used as primary languages of literary classics such as Gaha Sattasai
- * This includes the Maharashtri Prakrit or "Prakrit par excellence", which according to Dandin's Kavya-darsha, was prevalent in the Maharashtra region, and in which poems such as Ravana-vaho were composed.
Grammar
Medieval grammarians such as Markandeya describe a highly systematized Prakrit grammar, but the surviving Prakrit texts do not adhere to this grammar. For example, according to Vishvanatha, in a Sanskrit drama, the characters should speak Maharashtri Prakrit in verse and Shauraseni Prakrit in prose. But the 10th century Sanskrit dramatist Rajashekhara doesn't abide by this rule. Markandeya, as well as later scholars such as Sten Konow find faults with the Prakrit portions of Rajashekhara's writings, but it is not clear if the rule enunciated by Vishvanatha existed during Rajashekhara's time. Rajashekhara's himself imagines Prakrit as a single language or a single kind of language, alongside Sanskrit, Apabhramsha, and Paishachi.German Indologist Theodor Bloch dismissed the medieval Prakrit grammarians as unreliable, arguing that they were not qualified to describe the language of the texts composed centuries before them. Other scholars such as Sten Konow, Richard Pischel and Alfred Hillebrandt, disagree with Bloch. It is possible that the grammarians sought to codify only the language of the earliest classics of the Prakrit literature, such as the Gaha Sattasai. Another explanation is that the extant Prakrit manuscripts contain scribal errors. Most of the surviving Prakrit manuscripts were produced in a variety of regional scripts, during 1300-1800 CE. It appears that the scribes who made these copies from the earlier manuscripts did not have a good command of the original language of the texts, as several of the extant Prakrit texts contain inaccuracies or are incomprehensible.
Prakrita Prakasha, a book attributed to Vararuchi, summarizes various Prakrit languages
Prevalence
Prakrit literature was produced across a wide area of South Asia, from Kashmir in the north to Tamil Nadu in the south, and from Sindh in the west to Bengal in the east. Outside India, the language was also known in Cambodia and Java.Prakrit is often wrongly assumed to have been a language spoken by the common people, because it is different from Sanskrit, which is the predominant language of the ancient Indian literature. Several modern scholars, such as George Abraham Grierson and Richard Pischel, have asserted that the literary Prakrit does not represent the actual languages spoken by the common people of ancient India. This theory is corroborated by a market scene in Uddyotana's Kuvalaya-mala, in which the narrator speaks a few words in 18 different languages: some of these languages sound similar to the languages spoken in modern India; but none of them resemble the language that Uddyotana identifies as "Prakrit" and uses for narration throughout the text.
Literature
Literary Prakrit was among the main languages of the classical Indian culture. Dandin's Kavya-darsha mentions four kinds of literary languages: Sanskrit, Prakrit, Apabhramsha, and mixed. Bhoja's Sarasvati-Kanthabharana lists Prakrit among the few languages suitable for composition of literature. Mirza Khan's Tuhfat al-hind names Prakrit among the three kinds of literary languages native to India, the other two being Sanskrit and the vernacular languages. It describes Prakrit as a mixture of Sanskrit and vernacular languages, and adds that Prakrit was "mostly employed in the praise of kings, ministers, and chiefs".During a large period of the first millennium, literary Prakrit was the preferred language for the fictional romance in India. Its use as a language of systematic knowledge was limited, because of Sanskrit's dominance in this area, but nevertheless, Prakrit texts exist on topics such as grammar, lexicography, metrics, alchemy, medicine, divination, and gemology. In addition, the Jains used Prakrit for religious literature, including commentaries on the Jain canonical literature, stories about Jain figures, moral stories, hymns and expositions of Jain doctrine. Prakrit is also the language of some Shaiva tantras and Vaishnava hymns.
Besides being the primary language of several texts, Prakrit also features as the language of low-class men and most women in the Sanskrit stage plays. American scholar Andrew Ollett traces the origin of the Sanskrit Kavya to Prakrit poems.
Some of the texts that identify their language as Prakrit include:
- Hāla's Gaha Sattasai, anthology of single verse poems
- Ananda-vardhana's now-lost God of Five Arrows at Play, poem
- Sarvasena's Hari-vijaya, epic
- Pravarasena II's Ravana-vaho, epic
- Palitta's Tarangavati, fictional romance
- Palitta's Brilliance of the Connoisseurs
- Haribhadra's Samaraditya-charitra, fictional romance
- Uddyotana's Kuvalaya-mala, fictional romance
- Kautuhala's Lilavati or Kouhala's Lilavai, fictional romance
- Madhuka's Hara's Belt, a compendium covering a wide range of topics, such as casting love spells and treating snakebites
- Jineshvara's Treasury of Gatha-Jewels, anthology of verses
- Addahamana's Sandesha-rasaka, a message poem; the author states that his family came from "the land of the Muslims", which suggests that Addahamana is the Prakrit variant of `Abd ur-Rahman.
List of Prakrits
The languages that have been labeled "Prakrit" in modern times include the following:Not all of these languages were actually called "Prakrit" in the ancient period.
Dramatic Prakrits
Dramatic Prakrits were those that were devised specifically for use in dramas and other literature. Whenever dialogue was written in a Prakrit, the reader would also be provided with a Sanskrit translation. None of these Prakrits came into being as vernaculars, but some ended up being used as such when Sanskrit fell out of favor.The phrase "Dramatic Prakrits" often refers to three most prominent of them: Shauraseni, Magadhi Prakrit, and Maharashtri Prakrit. However, there were a slew of other less commonly used Prakrits that also fall into this category. These include Prachya, Bahliki, Dakshinatya, Shakari, Chandali, Shabari, Abhiri, Dramili, and Odri. There was a strict structure to the use of these different Prakrits in dramas. Characters each spoke a different Prakrit based on their role and background; for example, Dramili was the language of "forest-dwellers", Sauraseni was spoken by "the heroine and her female friends", and Avanti was spoken by "cheats and rogues".
Status
Prakrit languages held a lower social status than Sanskrit in ancient India. In the Sanskrit stage plays, such as Kalidasa's Shakuntala, high-class male characters typically speak Sanskrit, while the low-class male characters and most female characters typically speak Prakrit.Mirza Khan's Tuhfat al-hind characterizes Prakrit as the language of "the lowest of the low", stating that the language was known as Patal-bani or Nag-bani.
While Prakrits were originally seen as 'lower' forms of language, the influence they had on Sanskrit - allowing it to be more easily used by the common people - as well as the converse influence of Sanskrit on the Prakrits, gave Prakrits progressively higher cultural cachet.
Among modern scholars, Prakrit literature has received less attention than Sanskrit. Few modern Prakrit texts have survived in modern times, and even fewer have been published or attracted critical scholarship. Prakrit has not been designated as a classical language by the Government of India, although the earliest Prakrit texts are older than literature of most of the languages designated as such. One of the reasons behind this neglect of Prakrit is that it is not tied to a regional, national, ethnic, or religious identity.
Research institutes
In 1955, government of Bihar established at Vaishali, the Research Institute of Prakrit Jainology and Ahimsa with the aim to promote research work in Prakrit.The National Institute of Prakrit Study and Research is located in Shravanabelagola, Karnataka, India.